<p><strong>Kidney damage in COVID-19 patients with or without chronic kidney disease: Analysis of clinical characteristics and related risk factors</strong></p>
Online Publishing @ NISCAIR
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Title Statement |
<p><strong>Kidney damage in COVID-19 patients with or without chronic kidney disease: Analysis of clinical characteristics and related risk factors</strong></p> |
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Added Entry - Uncontrolled Name |
Liu, Hong Wang, Huanlan Tu, Can Mao, Dongdong Hu, Yanglin Zou, Rong Min, Yonglong Xiong, Fei Su, Wen |
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Uncontrolled Index Term |
Acute kidney injury (AKI); Anemia, CKD; Hypersensitive C-reactive protein; Serum creatinine; Cardiac troponin I |
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Summary, etc. |
COVID-19 poses more risk to patients who already suffer from other diseases, particularly respiratory disorder. In this study, we analyzed the clinical characteristics and related risk factors during hospitalization of COVID-19 patients admitted with kidney damage. A total of 102 COVID-19 patients with kidney damage [irrespective of their chronic kidney disease (CKD) history] during hospitalization were included in this study. The patients were divided into a core group and a group who developed critical illness or death. Clinical data included age, gender, length of hospitalization, clinical manifestations, medical history, hypersensitive C-reactive protein (hs -CRP), high serum creatinine, low cardiac troponin I (cTnI), and hemoglobin. Univariate and multivariate logistic regression models were used to analyze the risk factors of patients' outcome. Among the outcomes, 75 patients (73.53%) were cured, 27 (26.47%) developed to critical illness or death, 20 (19.61%) of them died. A total of 36 (4.26%) out of 845 COVID-19 patients, developed acute kidney injury (AKI). Decreased oxygen saturation, elevated hs-CRP, elevated serum creatinine, elevated cTnI, and anemia were related factors for COVID-19 patients who developed to critical illness or death (<em>P</em> <0.05). Decreased oxygen saturation, elevated hs-CRP and anemia were not independent factors, but elevated serum creatinine and elevated cTnI were independent factors for COVID-19 patients who developed to critical illness or death (<em>P</em> <0.05). Among COVID-19 patients with or without CKD but with kidney damage during hospitalization, patients with elevated serum creatinine and elevated TnI, more likely to developed critical illness or death. |
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Publication, Distribution, Etc. |
Indian Journal of Experimental Biology (IJEB) 2020-10-29 16:49:53 |
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Electronic Location and Access |
application/pdf http://op.niscair.res.in/index.php/IJEB/article/view/42370 |
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Data Source Entry |
Indian Journal of Experimental Biology (IJEB); ##issue.vol## 58, ##issue.no## 11 (2020): IJEB [November 2020] |
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Language Note |
en |
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